Abstract
CYSTIC fibrosis (CF) is a lethal genetic disease resulting in a reduced CI- permeability1, increased mucous sulphation 2, increased Na+ absorption3 and defective acidification of lysosomal vesicles4. The CF gene encodes a protein (the cystic fibrosis trans-membrane conductance regulator, CFTR5) that can function as a low-conductance Cl- channel with a linear current-voltage relationship whose regulation is defective in CF patients 6-8. Larger conductance, outwardly rectifying Cl- channels are also defective in CF and fail to activate when exposed either to cyclic AMP-dependent protein kinase A or to protein kinase C9-13. The role of the outwardly rectifying Cl- channel in CF has been questioned14. We report here that expression of recombinant CF genes using adeno-associated virus vectors in CF bronchial epithelial cells corrects defective Cl- secretion, that it induces the appearance of small, linear conductance Cl- channels, and restores protein kinase A activation of outwardly rectifying Cl- channels. These results re-establish an involvement of outwardly rectifying Cl- channels in CF and suggest that CFTR regulates more than one conductance pathway in airway tissues. © 1992 Nature Publishing Group.
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CITATION STYLE
Egan, M., Flotte, T., Afione, S., Solow, R., Zeitlin, P. L., Carter, B. J., & Guggino, W. B. (1992). Defective regulation of outwardly rectifying Cl- channels by protein kinase a corrected by insertion of CFTR. Nature, 358(6387), 581–584. https://doi.org/10.1038/358581a0
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